Human rights activists on Monday urged Japanese
authorities to crack down on child pornography, still widely available despite a
government overhaul of laws to protect children from sexual exploitation.
Japan in 2014 joined other major developed
nations and criminalised the possession of child pornography following calls by
campaigners who complained it was a major international source of such
material.
Before the changes came into effect last year, it
was the only Group of Seven nation in which the possession of sexualised images
or videos of people under 18 remained legal.
Human Rights Now, a Tokyo-based campaign group,
said in a report that DVDs clearly marked as child porn continue to be “openly
and widely distributed, displayed and sold at stores, and released on the
internet”.
Police rarely investigate pornographers who
appear to hire children, claiming they cannot confirm the ages of those
appearing in videos, according to the report.Campaigners in the report condemned that stance,
saying police should make the eradication of child porn a top priority.Japan’s National Police Agency had no immediate
comment on the report.During a year of field research, the group found
numerous DVDs — either actual or suspected child porn — at stores in Tokyo’s
famous Akihabara electronics district.
The report also called on the government to
pursue zero tolerance for materials that sexualise minors, including so-called
“child erotica” depicting half-naked children in skimpy outfits and sexually
provocative poses.
Such material, which remains in a legal grey
area, is widely available online and in stores.
The new laws do not apply to drawings or
digitally-created imagery, which means that graphic images of paedophilia in
manga comic books remain legal.
Last October United Nations special envoy Maud de
Boer-Buquicchio criticised the legislation as riddled with “numerous loopholes”
and lashed out at child erotica, saying kids were being exploited.
Under Japan’s law, anyone who “possesses child
pornography for the purpose of satisfying his/her sexual interest” faces
imprisonment of up to one year or a fine of up to one million yen ($9,700).
Those who produce child pornography can be
imprisoned for up to three years or fined as much as three million yen.
AFP
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